chocolate almond banana pudding

ingredients choc banana almond pudding

In case you haven’t noticed, we like pudding!

Only three ingredients, it is a raw, vegan and lenten pudding plus a good protein pick me up.  This is a go to lenten snack in our house and the girls love it.  Amazing as it sounds, there is no added sugar, but you will not miss it.  I promise!  The riper the banana the sweeter the flavor – so let your bananas sit on the counter till the peel is really yellow. No mushy bananas for this recipe though, save those for banana bread!

You don’t need to use almond butter.  It will taste just as good with peanut butter, but with so many peanut allergies these days, I have adapted most of our recipes to use other nuts.  You might even want to try to substitute tahini (sesame) butter.  Different, but yummy!

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Chocolate Banana Almond Pudding

Ingredients

2 ripe bananas

2 tablespoons cocoa powder

4 tablespoons almond butter (raw or toasted)

Place all ingredients in bowl and mash together.  If you have a large crowd of kids, this doubles triples and quadruples nicely!

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lenten spring asparagus

lemony olivey asparagus

This super yummy Lenten Spring Asparagus pairs well as a side dish with any lenten meal.  If you want, you can substitute it as your salad, because it can be served warm or cold.

A crunchy veggie dish like this is also great for those nights when you have everything tapas style…. little bowls of lots of leftovers or dips and sauces and breads.

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Lenten Spring Asparagus

Ingredients

1 pound fresh asparagus

1 teaspoon lemon zest (organic lemon – wash it before you zest)

6 kalamata olives pitted and sliced (you can use any variety)

If you are not fasting, drizzle with extra virgin cold or expeller pressed olive oil

Wash your asparagus and cut the bottom inch and a half off.  Leave the stalks long.  Heat a large non-stick skillet and place asparagus in it.  You should hear a sizzling sound.  Let it cook for about five minutes.  You can move it around, but I like to leave it in one place so the part of the asparagus on the pan gets a little caramelized.  It should have a bright green color when you take it off, and also still have a crispiness to it.  (Cooking note:  Some people like to boil their asparagus, but I prefer not too simply because vitamins and minerals will leach into the water – you get less nutrition that way.)

Place on serving dish.  Salt and pepper to taste.  Sprinkle zest and olives on top of the asparagus.

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Enjoy.

kalamata lemon and asparagus

Whole foods…. they are good for you!  Asparagus is an anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory food.  It is full of vitamins, minerals and fiber.  “Fermented olives” have probiotics and healthy bacteria and health protective nutrients.    The real surprise though is the lemon peel.  Lemon peel is a source of lemonene, which is a phytochemical found to prevent and even treat cancer in animals.  Lemonene is supportive of our livers (which are amazing) and a strong inducer of liver detoxification enzymes that neutralize carcinogens.  Lenten or not, this is a very healthy side dish.


lenten chili with guacamole

lenten chili

 This lenten vegetarian chili with guacamole is an easy weeknight favorite and if you end up with leftovers – it tastes even better the day after!

Chili can spark great debates about how it should be eaten.  Whether you like yours on it’s own or with rice, is up to you.  During Lent, we always serve our chili over brown rice.  The reason is a little nutrition combined with traditional know how that amounts to a complete protein on your plate.

There are twenty different amino acids that can form a protein, nine of these amino acids, our body can’t produce on its own.  In order to be considered “complete,” a protein must contain all nine of these essential amino acids in roughly equal amounts. For this reason, these nine amino acids are considered  essential amino acids —we need them in food form because our body can not synthesize these from other available amino acids.   Since proteins are the building blocks of the body this becomes a consideration during long periods of fasting.

The majority of plants and grains do not contain complete proteins; however, meat, dairy, seafood and eggs do.  During long meatless and dairy-less periods it is possible to obtain the necessary protein for our diets through the combining of certain foods.  Traditional and ethnic fasting recipes tend to combine legumes and grains in some fashion.

While it is not necessary to consume complete proteins at every meal, over the course of a day or days it makes a difference.  The following food combinations yield a complete complement of amino acids.

  1. Grains (rice, corn, wheat, barley, etc.) and  legumes (peas, beans, lentils)
  2. Seeds (Sesame or sunflower) and legumes
  3. Hummus and pita
  4. lentils and rice

These are good examples of combining foods such  that all 9 of the essential amino acids are present.

Aside from proper combining of foods, the following are good plant sources of complete protein to include in your diet.

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Quinoa

Buckwheat

Soy (tempeh, sprouted tofu and miso)

Hempseed

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Chia

Soy

Rice and Beans

Now, for the chili.

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lenten chili with guacamole

Ingredients

2 cups of any combination of the following beans : red kidney beans, white kidney beans, black beans, pinto beans

1 onion red or yellow, diced

2 carrots diced.

5 cloves minced garlic

1/4 – 1/2 cup chili powder (we use Penzey’s regular).  Use your judgement here, different chili strengths for different palates.

Salt and pepper to taste

2 chopped red peppers

1 carrot, chopped small

2- 14 oz cans diced organic tomatoes

3 cups water

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The night before, place beans in a bowl and fill to cover with water.  Leave until you are ready to make chili.

chili beans

To make the chili, rinse beans and place in large pot with water to cover.  Turn the heat to high to bring to boil and reduce to medium.  Skim any foam that accumulates.  Cook for an hour.  When the beans are done drain.  You may reserve some of the cooking liquid.

When the beans are almost done (they will begin to soften), saute the onion, red pepper, carrots and chili powder with 3 tablespoons olive oil in a large pot.  Saute for three minutes, until the chili powder becomes fragrant.

Add remaining ingredients.

saute

Cook over  low simmer, with loose lid on the pot,  for approximately 45 minutes.  Check on the consistency, you may cook longer if you like a thicker chili.

Serve over brown rice topped with a hearty scoop of guacamole (2 avocados, 1/2  clove garlic, bunch cilantro chopped, 2 tablespoons red onion chopped, juice of one lime – mash it all together).

yummy.

 

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melomakarona

melomakarona

“Perhaps because they are so rarely made, sweets are the only foods on the islands for which written recipes exist… Each island home always has one or two kinds of cookies in the pantry, such as crunchy ring shaped cookies scented with cinnamon and orange, or simple almond and sugar paste cookies, fragrant with rose water and tangerine juice or zest, or honey drenched melomakarona, the richly aromatic Christmas cookies that are served through the holiday season to the end of January.”

Foods of the Greek Islands – Aglaia Kremezi

Melomakarona are hands down one of our family’s favorite cookies.  Like all things worthwhile, they take a bit of effort, but they never disappoint.  Our family makes melomakarona about once or so during every Fast, usually to take with us for Church coffee hour or as a snack after the Presanctified Liturgy.

This recipe is made with whole wheat flour and while I used the recipe from Foods of the Greek Islands as my starting point, I have tweaked it over the years to incorporate the whole wheat flour and also to minimize the sugar (in this case, the syrup which called for one part white sugar, one part honey and one part water), I didn’t change the amount of sugar in the dough.

You’ll see that in this recipe the melomakarona cookies are drenched in a syrup of only honey and water, scented with orange zest and that it is heated only a little, just enough to thoroughly blend the honey and the water. The reason is that raw honey has enzymes that are beneficial to our bodies which also allows it to metabolize easier.  Once honey is heated over 120 F, the enzymes die and the honey is no different to our bodies than white sugar.

If you would prefer not to use whole wheat flour, substitute and equal amount of pastry flour in it’s place.  We also grind our own flour, which has made all the difference when it comes to whole wheat.  These melomakarona cookies have a nutty mellow flavor – and are very soft and moist.

Grinding your own flour is very simple, and really opened my kids up to the deliciousness of whole wheat.  Whole wheat flour from the store can sometimes have a stale quality, so grinding it fresh and using it within a week (keep in freezer) brings a depth of flavor that we had no idea we were even missing.  Plus you get the fiber and vitamin and mineral content that are missing from refined white flour.

Most grocery stores sell whole wheat in the bulk section.  You’ll want to chose soft white wheat for this recipe.  For grinding, Kitchen Aid has a mill attachment for their mixers, both Blend Tec and Vitamix can grind wheat into four, or you can purchase a flour mill.

 A dear friend, whose parents came to this country from Greece was kind enough to ask her sweet mom for me whether she remembers ever using white flour growing up… because I wanted to be true to the traditions of even how sweets are made.  Her mom remembers using whole wheat…  so it’s an appropriate adjustment.   About a hundred years ago, families would have taken their wheat to the village mill for grinding, and their breads and pastries would have been made from whole white wheat.

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Melomakarona Cookies

Ingredients:

for the dough

  • 1/1/4 cups olive oil (don’t use canola or vegetable, please)
  • 1/3 cup raw turbinado sugar cane
  • grated zest of three oranges
  • 3-4 cups whole wheat pastry flour
  • 2-1/2 teaspoons baking powder (buy brands that say aluminum free on the label)
  • 1-1/2 cups finely ground semolina (Bob’s Red Mill carries it)
  • 1/2 cup brandy (don’t skip this… it imparts an elastic quality to the dough)
  • 1 teaspoon ground cloves
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 cup fresh orange juice

for the Syrup

  • 2 cups raw honey
  • 1 cup water
  • 1 tablespoon orange zest

for the filling

  • 2 cups walnuts
  • 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon

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In a large bowl mix flour, semolina, cinnamon, cloves, baking powder and orange zest.

dry ingredients melomakarona

In a separate bowl, whisk orange juice, olive oil and brandy.  Add to dry ingredients and form into a dough.  Turn out onto a floured surface and knead lightly.  Place back in bowl to rest.  You will notice that the dough has a very elastic quality, not quite like yeast but activated from the brandy.  (Note: the brandy and orange juice will begin to neutralize the phytates in the flour, making the mineral content of the whole wheat assimilable to our bodies.)

Let stand for 20 minutes.

Place walnut and cinnamon filling mixture into a blender or food processor and pulse until ground.

When you are ready to make the cookies, line a cookie sheet with parchment paper and turn the oven on 350F to preheat.

dough melomakarona

To prepare the dough into cookies, we start by scooping out portions and placing them on a cookie sheet.

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To form melomakarona cookies, take a ball of dough and flatten in your hand.  Place a small scoop of the crushed walnut cinnamon mixture into the center and close it up.  Squeeze the seams together and place seam side down on a parchment lined cookie sheet.

forming cookies

Once you have formed and filled all of the cookies, place the leftover walnut cinnamon mixture aside.  You will use this to sprinkle on top of the cookies after they are baked and drenched in the syrup.

ready for the oven melomakarona

Bake in oven for about 30 minutes.  You will know they are done because the house is enveloped in a lovely aroma.

While they are baking, place the honey and water and 1 tablespoon orange zest into a large sauce pot over medium heat.  Stir constantly until just warm.  You should be able to place your finger in it without it feeling hot.  Remove from heat and pour into a 9 x 12 pan.

orange zesty honey syrup

When the cookies are done baking, remove them and place them into the baking dish with the honey syrup.  Let them sit over night.  You may turn them once to get them really saturated.  Most if not all of the liquid will be gone in the morning.  If you have started these cookies early in the day, then let soak for about 5 – 8 hours in the syrup before finishing them.

getting a honey orange marinade

Now you will take the remaining walnut mixture and spoon it atop of each cookie.  Place each one into a large paper cupcake holder.

yum

And now, for the best part…. enjoy your melomakarona!


simplest snack – ever

avocado snack

Looking for a healthy easy snack for the Fast, or just any time?  If you have an avocado, a little salt and pepper and just a squeeze of lemon, you have the world’s easiest snack, complete with it’s own bowl.

Halve and put the avocado, squeeze half a lemon atop of it, and sprinkle with salt and pepper.  Spoon it right out of the peel.  It is delicious, a good source of fiber, vitamin B, C and E.  They are also a source of good fat (monounsaturated)  and contain plenty of potassium.  Besides that, they are just delicious!


Lenten sesame truffles

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Everyone likes a snack, and these nutty truffles are a delicious treat to keep on hand during Lent and really any time of the year.  These sesame butter truffles are low in sugar, taste great and also a nice project for the kids.

Over the years we have really tried to cut down our sugar.  When I began studying holistic nutrition and learning about just how depleting sugar is to our bodies I felt compelled as a mom to put that into action in my home.  So, I have steadily been working at drastically reducing the sugar in our recipes, as well as changing the types of sugar we eat.

To give you an idea, we have a coconut cream pie recipe that called for 2 cups of sugar.  Through trial and error, we have settled on just 1/2 cup of sugar  – that is the point the family says, “hey, it’s doesn’t taste right.”

Why reduce the sugar content?  There are a lot of reasons and of course blood sugar swings is just one of them.  In the past hundred years, the average person has gone from from eating just about 2 pounds of sugar  per year, to close to 150 pounds of sugar per year.  That is a massive increase, and it’s questionable whether our pancreas and bodies were designed to handle such an onslaught.  Excess sugar intake can contribute to a weakened immune system, vitamin and mineral deficiencies and increased risk of diabetes and acidity in the digestive tract.  That acidity creates an atmosphere conducive to pathogenic bacteria and yeasts.

Did you know that for every molecule of sugar you consume, your body needs 55 – 65 molecules of magnesium just to metabolize it.  And that’s just magnesium. The digestive demands of sugar leech other vital nutrients from our bodies, such as chromium and copper and also interferes with the absorption of calcium.

Our kids today get sugar in most everything and as a nation we are generally depleted of magnesium, which is necessary to process carbohydrates.  Among other things, deficiencies of magnesium can lead to decreased energy.  Magnesium works together with calcium so that your muscles contract and relax.  So muscle spasms (think charlie horse) can arise from magnesium imbalances.

Paleo recipes recognize that impact of sugar in our health and that’s why you won’t find much sugar in them.  None the less, they are delicious and provide a guilt free tasty treat!

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Lenten & Paleo Sesame Truffles

Ingredients:

  • 4 tablespoons raw tahini paste.  You can get roasted, but it will change the flavor.  See which you like best.
  • 8 tablespoons coconut butter (also called coconut manna)
  • 2 tablespoon unsweetened shredded coconut
  • 4 tablespoons  + 1 teaspoon maple syrup
  • pinch sea salt
  • seeds from two vanilla pods or 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • 2 tablespoons toasted sesame seeds for coating
  • 2 tablespoons coco powder for coating.

Melt coconut manna over the stove.  Add softened coconut butter, sesame paste (tahini), maple syrup, sea salt and vanilla bean (vanilla extract) and mix until smooth.

Form into bite sized balls and roll in coco powder or sesame seeds.  Place on a parchment lined cookie sheet or plate and refrigerate for about an hour to set.

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Additional Resources:

 http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2010/04/20/sugar-dangers.aspx
McBride, N. (2010). Gut and psychology syndrome: Natural treatment for autism, dyspraxia, A.D.D., dyslexia,

A.D.H.D., depression, schizophrenia. Cambridge, U.K.: Medinform Pub.]. (111-112)

Nancy Appleton; G. N. Jacobs. Suicide by Sugar: A Startling Look at Our #1 National Addiction.  Kindle Edition.


Lenten red lentil dahl

 red lentil prep

This is one of my favorite recipes, both during Lent and throughout the year.  It is simple to make, tastes great and everyone loves it.  Serve the red lentil dahl over brown rice, with some warmed whole wheat naan,  and you have an easy weeknight meal that only tastes better as a leftover.

Ginger is a spice which is very healthy for the stomach, and it has a peppery bite to it.  Try to use fresh ginger and grate it with a microplane grater if you have one, otherwise just mince it with a knife.  If you plant your ginger root in a pot and put it on a sunny window, you can grow more ginger root for free!

Red lentils are nutrient laden and restorative to our bodies.  The ginger and turmeric lend anti-inflammatory qualities to this soothing meal.  Although this is an Indian lentil dish, lentils in general  are a traditional meal during Lent.

 

favorite spices

My favorite spices are from Penzey’s  They began as an online store and their spices are very flavorful, but more than that, very affordable.  4 ounces of most Penzey’s costs less than McCormick’s, Spice Hunter and other spice brands at the grocery stores.  So for example, at Walmart, McCormick’s ground cumin costs $4.48 for 1.5 ounces, whereas at Penzeys you’ll spend $5.69 for a 4 ounce bag of a better quality more flavorful cumin.

I have found this to be the same, across the board for all of Penzeys spices.

Lenten Red Lentil Dahl

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Ingredients:

  • 1 cup red lentils (they are actually orange)
  • 4 cups water
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon turmeric powder
  • 1–3 teaspoons grated fresh ginger
  • 2 tablespoons oil or butter or ghee or coconut oil (optional)
  • 1 teaspoon powdered cumin
  • 1 teaspoon powdered coriander
  • 2 medium sized carrots diced (about 1 cup)

 

Rinse red lentils and soak for 2–12 hours.  This step is not as critical with lentils as with larger beans, but it does help to neutralize any phytic acid present in beans and grains.  Phytic acid binds to the minerals in the beans and therefore makes your absorption of these minerals difficult.  Turns out our grandmothers knew what they were doing!  Traditional preparations are generally more nourishing…. even if they do take a little tiny bit more time.

Place all ingredients in a pot or large high rimmed pan.  Bring to simmer and cook for 45 minutes or until liquid has drained.

Serve over brown rice.  My favorite way to make rice for this dish is 2 cups brown rice, 3 cups water, 1 cup coconut milk.  It makes a tasty coconut-ty rice that goes really well with the dal.

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Enjoy.

red lentil dal dinner


lenten winter curry squash soup

curried squash soupThis lenten curry squash soup is born out of several squashes from our CSA box that have just been sitting on the kitchen counter.  You really can use any winter squash variety.  We used a sugar pumpkin, butternut and acorn squash – so this is more of a triple squash soup.

Use whatever winter squash you have on hand, or that you can find in the market.  Kabocha squash would be great in this spiced squash soup too.

A note about the curry paste.  We used to buy our curry paste from the local Thai market (oriental grocery stores have awesome spices).  Sadly, our local Thai market closed.  So for now I am using the Taste of Thai brand.  It is not as spicy and flavorful as the brand in the Thai Grocery, but is still good.

The base of this soup is the vegetable.mineral.broth.  That is why there is no salt in the final recipe.  If you are not fasting, chicken stock will work nicely here too.

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Ingredients:

  • 4-5 pounds winter squash : kabocha, acorn, butternut, pumpkin
  • 1 medium onion chopped
  • 3-4 cups vegetable broth
  • 1 can coconut milk
  • 2 tablespoons red curry (or more to taste)
  • 1 tablespoon cinnamon

Preparation

Preheat oven to 375F.  Cut squashes in half and spoon out seeds.  Place cut side down on a cookie sheet and place in oven.  Bake for one hour or until tender.  Remove from oven and spoon out squash meat into separate bowl.

Sautee onion over medium heat.  Add 2 cups of vegetable broth and cooked squash.  Add spices and coconut milk.  Using an immersion blender, mix the soup until it is entirely pureed.  Check the consistency, add more broth if it is too thick.

Garnish with cilantro, avocado or parsley.

Enjoy.

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Alternatively, you can make this a sage and thyme based soup.  Omit the coconut milk, use an extra cup of vegetable broth and add to the sautéing onions one tablespoon of fresh sage and thyme.

There are so many variations to this soup, play with the ingredients and find what you like best.


homemade hummus

hummus

No matter how many different varieties of hummus there are on the market, your own will taste better than all of them.  People always ask for this hummus recipe, so it’s written down here for all.   This is a basic recipe, and you can make it your own by adding roasted red peppers, ground olives, roasted eggplant or caramelized onions.  This is a garlicky recipe.  You can reduce the amount of garlic to your taste.

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Ingredients

2 cups cooked chickpeas.  Preferred are chickpeas that have been soaked over night and cooked, but canned are fine too.  Put some of the cooking water aside, in case you need to thin out your hummus.

3 garlic cloves

1/4 cup fresh lemon juice

1/4 cup tahini (this is a sesame paste )

salt to taste

Optional : extra virgin olive oil

Preparation

Add chickpeas, peeled garlic, salt,  tahini, lemon juice to food processor or very heavy duty blender.  Turn on for about 1 minute.  Scrape down sides if necessary.  Check consistency of the hummus.  You can add some of the water that you used to cook the chickpeas to get to desired texture.  If you do not have any of that water, use tap water.

Taste for saltiness.  Our experience is that the hummus requires a fair amount of salt.

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Enjoy with whole wheat pita or naan bread.  Hummus is also great dip for veggies, like carrots and red peppers.

When I was younger and in college, I spent a fair amount of time in the home of my Jordanian Palestinian very good friend.  Her mom made (and still does) the best hummus.  She would drizzle a very good amount of olive oil atop of the hummus and scoop it up in fresh pita.  This a fond memory for me, and despite how great this hummus tastes… hers tastes fantastically better.

And of course that could have everything to do with their great company and friendship.


garlic

Awesome Garlic

 

“Shallots are for babies; Onions are for men; garlic is for heroes.”

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Garlic.  When we think of it, pungent and smelly come to mind.  So it might surprise you to know that garlic is a member of the lily family and is a perennial plant that is cultivated world-wide.

Garlic has earned it’s modern reputation mostly as a staple in Mediterranean cuisine, but it’s medicinal and therapeutic qualities have been known since  the most ancient times.  Even pre-dating written history, garlic has been used to treat a wide variety of illness and conditions.  In fact, the earliest documents describing the medicinal qualities of garlic are 5,000 year old Sanskrit writings.

Hippocrates, Aristotle and Pliny cite numerous therapeutic applications for garlic.  It’s health benefits were known throughout all of the ancient civilizations including the Greeks, Romans, Egyptians, Babylonians and Chinese.

It would seem truly, that God, in His abundant wisdom really created garlic to be both our food and our medicine, because even the Israelites grumbled at not having cucumbers, leeks or garlic during their 40 year sojourn  from Egypt to the Promised Land.

But, one of my favorite stories of garlic, is that in 1721 in Marseilles, France a terrible plague broke out.  Four condemned criminals were recruited to bury the dead (which in and of itself was a death sentence).  And so it was amazing that hese four men were immune to the plague.  Immune!  The reason – they had a secret concoction made of macerated garlic and wine.

This drink became known as “vineigre des quatre voleurs” or “four thieves vinegar” and it is still available in France today!  Not going to be in France any time soon?  You can make your own .  There are several recipes online, but make sure to use one that actually lists garlic as an ingredient…  some omit it.  Impressive, is that even WebMD has a recipe for it.

purple garlic

 

In our garden, garlic is a pleasure to grow – mostly because it needs little work.  We usually plant in the fall, and it’s a great winter crop.   The bugs don’t like it and the weeds don’t hinder it.

If you garden, then you already know that you can grow garlic at a fraction of what it costs at the farmer’s market or store.  It’s antimicrobial – that is antibiotic, anti fungal and antiviral.  These qualities make it a nutritional virtue and worthy of every meal.   But it is also immune enhancing, anti-cancer promoting, a protective factor against heart disease and also anti-inflammatory.

 

Below is a summary of the nourishing benefits of garlic.

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  • Garlic has potent medicinal properties.  Most of garlics health benefits come from the sulfur compounds that are formed when a clove of garlic is chopped.  This compound is called allicin has powerful biological effects.

  • If you suffer from frequent colds, seriously consider adding garlic to your diet, or taking a supplement.  Garlic helps you fight the common cold, in part by boosting the immune system.  A daily garlic supplement can reduce the number of colds by more than 50%.

  • Even if you should come down with a cold, garlic can reduce the length of it by 70%.  In clinical studies, it reduced the duration of participants colds from 5 days to 1.5 days!

  • Garlic can improve cholesterol levels.  This is good news, because there is much talk these days about the long term dangers of statin use.

  • Garlic is very antioxidant.  Antioxidants support the bodies protective mechanisms against oxidative damage.

  • Garlic aids the bodies detoxification processes.  God created you with a built in detoxification ability, but those organs which include the liver, kidneys, skin and lymph need support of adequate minerals and nutrients to function properly.  At high doses the sulfur compounds in garlic (which support the liver pathways for heavy metal detox) have shown to protect the organs from heavy metals.

    • “Employees at a car battery plant, where there was excessive exposure to lead, found that garlic supplementation reduced the lead levels in the blood by 19%.  It also reduced the signs of clinical toxicity.”  Well Being Journal

  • Garlic has broad spectrum activity against many bacteria, viruses, worms, and fungi.  Garlics antibacterial properties have been shown effective against even bacteria that are resistant to one or more antibiotics.[/box]

garlic

If you think you might like to grown your own garlic, I love Southern Exposure Seed Exchange varieties and Baker’s Creek Heirloom Seeds.  They are tried and tested favorites.  You can also grow your own, by simply taking any garlic cloves that have begun to show green sprouts on your counter.  Bury them in a pot or in your garden.  They will grow.

It’s good to have a planting guide for your region.  If you live in the mid-Atlantic,Southern Exposure Planting Guide is the planting guide that we use.  Baker’s Creek also has a planting guide.  Finally, the National Gardening Association also has some good information on planting for your area.

Garlic is really pungent when eaten raw but if you cook it, it’s delicious enough to eat it on it’s own.  If you think the Four Thieves Vinegar is a little too dicey, this is a great recipe highlighting the subtle flavors of baked garlic.

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Roasted Garlic Recipe

Ingredients:

  • 2 heads garlic
  • baguette slices
  • olive oil
  • diced fresh tomatoes

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F.

Slice off the top each head of garlic to expose some of the cloves inside. Place the heads on a piece of foil. Drizzle with olive oil and wrap in the foil. Roast until cloves are lightly browned and tender, about 30 minutes.

Enjoy it plain, or smear a clove atop a toasted baguette slice, drizzled with olive oil and sliced tomato.

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Resources:

Murray, M., & Pizzorno, J. (1998). Encyclopedia of natural medicine

The Powerful Health Benefits of Garlic.  Well Being Journal. Vol 24, No 1, January/ February 2015